TAIPEI (Reuters) - Taiwan has allocated T$3 billion ($92.55 million) over four years, beginning next year, to launch a long-awaited program for the island to build its own diesel-electric submarines.

The expected allocation is the first for a plan that has been talked about since the early 2000s, when a deal with the United States for eight diesel-electric submarines got bogged down because of technical and political constraints.

The spending was set out in the defense ministry's budget for 2016 and seen by Reuters.

The plan come as other navies in the regional expand their submarine fleets in part to create a strategic deterrent against China's growing naval assertiveness in Asian waters.

Taiwan has four aging submarines, including two that date to World War Two, although its military is otherwise considered generally modern.

China has about 70 submarines, along with dozens of surface ships and a refurbished aircraft carrier.

China sees self-ruled Taiwan as a renegade province and has never renounced the use of force to take back the island.

Critical to Taiwan's indigenous submarine program is the transfer from the United States or other Western countries of submarine-manufacturing technology.

Support from U.S. companies or release of export technology controls would need a nod from the U.S. government.

China opposes any form of military technological transfers or weapons sales to Taiwan.

The spending plan, which is allotted through to 2019, covers only the contract design phase of what should be a decades-long program.

Taiwan's Ship and Ocean Industries R&D Center (SOIC), a government-backed ship designer and technical consultant, is expected to select a consortium to lead the contract design phase, according to military and industry sources in Taiwan.